Chef Reny Alfonso (Photo: Michael Donahue)

Reny Alfonsoโ€™s favorite catch phrase โ€” โ€œDoes not suck yo!โ€ โ€” could apply to his career choice.

He almost had to become a chef.

โ€œMy grandmother, I remember vividly, every week we would pick a different country we were learning about and she would make something from that country,โ€ says Alfonso, director of operations at Celtic Crossing and Bog & Barley.

Born in San Josรฉ, Costa Rica, Alfonso remembers his grandmother making โ€œstraight-up paellaโ€ from Spain one time. โ€œWhen we did the United States, she made apple pie.โ€

Alfonso loved being in the kitchen. โ€œIโ€™ve always liked the heart of where all the parties were.โ€

His fatherโ€™s best friend, who held all-day cookouts at his house, taught Alfonso how to grill. โ€œIt would start out with sausage on the grill. And youโ€™d eat that with some bread and some chimichurri. Someone would throw on some sweet breads and some octopus after that. A short rib would go on. Then a prime rib.

โ€œThe kids would be in the pool swimming and Iโ€™d be on the grill.โ€

Alfonsoโ€™s first restaurant job was Markโ€™s on the Grove in Coral Gables, Florida. One night, his brother-in-law couldnโ€™t pick him up after work. โ€œThe chef said he would take me home. On the way home, we went to a bar. And I stood there at a bar having a beer with all the cooks and shit. And I said, โ€˜I definitely want to do this for the rest of my life.โ€™

โ€œFor me, it was almost like finding a second family. A bunch of people with one direction and one goal. And just having a good time doing it at the same time.โ€

Alfonso, who went to culinary school at Johnson & Wales University – North Miami, worked his way through some of the top restaurants in Florida and New York.

In 2005, he became executive chef of Chez Philippe at The Peabody. โ€œWe changed the menu, the whole format, to a French-Asian concept.โ€

He began doing charcuterie after a trip to Austria, where he watched The Peabodyโ€™s pastry chef Konrad Spitzbartโ€™s family cure meat. โ€œI converted my house in Mud Island to a cure room. I had two cure boxes set up in my garage, three set up in The Peabody, and then I built a giant smoker in the garage at my house for cold smoking.โ€

The Chez Philippe menu featured โ€œwhatever was coming out of the cure box at the time of service. We did from snout to tail.โ€

In 2010, Alfonso moved to Philadelphia to work for Starr Restaurants for the next decade.

Alfonsoโ€™s friend DJ Naylor, who owns Celtic Crossing, told him his new restaurant idea. โ€œHe always had a dream to build something bigger than what a traditional Irish pub would be, but still with the heart and feel of an Irish pub.โ€

In 2021, Naylor and Alfonso began working on Naylorโ€™s dream restaurant: Bog & Barley. โ€œโ€˜Bogโ€™ is โ€˜from the earth.โ€™ And โ€˜barleyโ€™ is for the whiskey aspect.

โ€œThe idea I had for this is, โ€˜Yes, itโ€™s an Irish restaurant. And, yes, we have Irish dishes on the menu. But I donโ€™t want to do them the way theyโ€™re stereotypically portrayed.โ€™ I had managed so many different restaurants over the last 10, 15 years, I wanted to incorporate a little bit of what I learned at those restaurants.โ€

Alfonso keeps a little bit of Ireland in his non-Irish dishes. โ€œI took steak au poivre and, instead of using brandy, weโ€™re using Irish whiskey in the sauce. For the pork porterhouse, Iโ€™ve got an Irish cider glaze on it.โ€

Alfonse hired Joel Lemay as Bog & Barleyโ€™s executive chef and Max Williams as Celtic Crossingโ€™s executive chef. โ€œIโ€™m in the kitchen with both of them.โ€

Alfonso doesnโ€™t want Bog & Barley to be stuffy. โ€œThis restaurant, as fancy as it may look, is not a fancy restaurant. You can come in whenever you want and have whatever you want. Itโ€™s affordable.โ€

The restaurant is โ€œapproachable on a regular basis, not just a special occasion.โ€

Bog & Barley is at 6150 Poplar Avenue, Suite 124, in Regalia Shopping Center.

Michael Donahue began his career in 1975 at the now-defunct Memphis Press-Scimitar and moved to The Commercial Appeal in 1984, where he wrote about food and dining, music, and covered social events until...